Sony's push into the future of gaming sounds like it's going to cost you

The company's PlayStation 4 console is the sales leader (by far)
compared to Microsoft's Xbox One and Nintendo's Wii U. And Sony's
PlayStation division is on the verge of a massive new addition to
its popular game console:
PlayStation VR.

The virtual reality headset that Sony's making is both high-end
and incredibly accessible. Simply plug it into your PlayStation 4
and you're in. That's it.

Let's compare that to the other high-end virtual reality
headsets coming from Facebook and HTC: They require expensive,
high-powered computers to run them, large, empty spaces to use
them, and tracking systems mounted to walls/above monitors to be
tracked.

All that said, the head of Sony's PlayStation division, Andrew
House, just said something in an interview that could seriously
hinder PlayStation VR's accessibility. The headset will
apparently cost as much as "a new gaming platform." Uh
oh.

The interview was conducted
with Bloomberg Businessweek on the heels of Sony's
PlayStation VR renaming announcement on September 15. House said
there are at least 10 VR-specific games headed to PlayStation VR
when it launches in the first half of 2016, from a game where you
pilot a massive mech suit in a futuristic sport to a new-ish
entry in the long-running "Final Fantasy" series.

That's a decent amount of stuff to play, but consumers are going
to need a pretty good reason to spend "new gaming platform"
amounts of money. Of course, new game platforms range in price
pretty dramatically — a new PlayStation 3 at launch cost $500 at
minimum, whereas an OUYA game console cost just $100 at launch.
Samsung's virtual reality headset, Gear VR, costs $200 — the HTC
Vive and Oculus Rift from HTC/Valve and Facebook, respectively,
aren't priced yet. Early versions of the Oculus Rift cost between
$200 and $300, though they employed technology that's nowhere
near as cutting edge as what's in next year's headsets.

We asked Sony for a better idea of what House meant and have yet
to hear back, but we're willing to bet he doesn't mean
it'll be cheap.